Swiss lawmakers consider nationwide restrictions on gender reassignment procedures for minors, as debate intensifies over medical rights and youth protection.

"For young people who don't feel they have the right body, the pressure to change something about their birth gender is great."
The quiet corridors of the Federal Palace are bracing for a loud, ideological showdown. A fierce debate over the medical rights of minors has erupted, driven by a decisive push from the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP). Zurich Health Minister Natalie Rickli ignited the fuse in July, demanding a sweeping national ban on gender reassignment surgery for minors. Now, the spark has jumped to Bern.
National Councilor Nina Fehr Düsel has formally submitted a motion that demands Parliament draw a hard line. The proposal is uncompromising: a total prohibition on surgical interventions for minors and a drastic restriction on puberty blockers, relegating their use strictly to scientific studies. This is no longer a theoretical discussion; it is a legislative offensive targeting the intersection of youth protection and medical autonomy.
While the proponents argue this is a necessary shield against irreversible decisions made too young, opponents view it as a draconian encroachment on patient rights. The Swiss Parliament now faces a critical test: it must decide whether the state or the individual holds the ultimate power over a minor's body. The political machinery is in motion, and the outcome will redefine the boundaries of Swiss healthcare law.
The urgency in Parliament is fueled by a stark, undeniable trajectory in the data. Between 2018 and 2023, the number of gender reassignment surgeries performed on minors in Switzerland more than quadrupled. Federal figures reveal a jump from a mere 7 procedures in 2018 to 32 in 2023. While the absolute numbers remain low relative to the population, the trend line is vertical and impossible to ignore.
Crucially, the data paints a specific picture of what is happening inside Swiss operating rooms. Every single one of these recorded interventions involved breast operations—specifically torsoplasty, which includes mastectomies and breast reconstruction. These are irreversible structural changes. Contrary to some of the more heated rhetoric, there is no evidence of genital operations being performed on minors during this period.
However, the rapid increase in mastectomies has provided ammunition for critics who argue that permanent physical alterations are becoming too accessible too quickly. This statistical surge sits at the heart of the motion in Bern. Lawmakers are not reacting to a hypothetical; they are responding to a concrete shift in medical reality, questioning whether a fourfold increase in five years represents a liberation of identity or a failure of protection.
Switzerland currently navigates a legal labyrinth where parental authority can be completely bypassed. Under the current framework, there is no fixed age limit for gender reassignment procedures. Instead, the system relies on the fluid concept of "capacity of judgement." If a doctor determines a teenager is capable of understanding the consequences of their decision, that minor can consent to surgery—even against the explicit wishes of their parents.
This principle creates a profound power struggle within the family unit. The Swiss Academy of Medical Sciences provides guidelines, but the final assessment remains subjective, resting in the hands of medical professionals. This means a 15-year-old deemed "capable" holds the legal right to authorize irreversible changes to their body, leaving parents on the sidelines.
The motion pending in Parliament seeks to shatter this status quo. By imposing a federal ban, the state would effectively override both the minor's autonomy and the doctor's assessment. It represents a fundamental shift from a case-by-case medical evaluation to a rigid legal standard. The debate is forcing Switzerland to confront a difficult question: At what point does the protection of a minor supersede their right to self-determination?
The proposed legislation aims to draw a definitive red line through the medical toolkit available to trans adolescents. The debate distinguishes sharply between reversible and irreversible interventions. Puberty blockers, which temporarily pause physical development to buy time for reflection, would be severely curtailed, permitted only within the rigid confines of scientific studies. This would effectively end their routine prescription for gender dysphoria in minors.
On the other side of the line lies surgery—mastectomies, phalloplasties, and neovaginas. While genital operations are practically non-existent for minors in current Swiss practice, the ban would preemptively outlaw them, along with the rising number of chest surgeries. Torsoplasty, often sought by trans men, leads to the loss of breastfeeding ability and permanent scarring.
Proponents of the ban argue that minors lack the foresight to comprehend the lifelong implications of such sterility and physical alteration. Opponents counter that denying these treatments exacerbates the intense psychological suffering of gender dysphoria. As Parliament prepares to debate, the medical community watches closely. The outcome will dictate whether treatment plans are determined by clinical assessment or political decree.